Bristol Diocese have created a really thought-provoking document for teams to analyse and evaluate their own Messy Church. Why not give it a try if you’re exploring the aspect of the Discipleship Pilot which is ‘improving your Messy Church’?
Download the PDF

Here’s a helpful tool to get your team discussing what you might do to help your Messy Church grow disciples. You’ll find lots of background details in the May-August 2018 issue of Get Messy! It’s very simple to use:

A really helpful guide to doing Messy Church Communion in an Anglican setting. This is a collaboration between Messy Church BRF and the Liturgical Commission of the Church of England, with help from Hymns Ancient and Modern.
Read the introductory blog

Messy Church regional coordinator for Leeds, Rachel Gotobed, has written this great Christmas play, The Gingerbread Man’s Christmas Adventure. It would work well as a standalone play or could be used alongside Renita Boyle's book The Gingerbread Nativity.

We have made 13 activities from Messy Church Does Science available to download for free, some of which are not included in the book itself.
Click here to download all 13 activities.
If you would like to download individual activities, please click below:

You can see photos from the Floating and sinking eggs activity in Messy Church Does Science below.
All these images are available to download via Flickr under a Creative Commons license. See the album on Flickr.

You can see photos from the Tornado in a bottle activity in Messy Church Does Science below.
All these images are available to download via Flickr under a Creative Commons license. See the album on Flickr.

You can see photos from the Storm in a jar/Clouds in a jar activity in Messy Church Does Science below.
All these images are available to download via Flickr under a Creative Commons license. See the album on Flickr.

You can see photos from the Cartesian diver activity in Messy Church Does Science below.
All these images are available to download via Flickr under a Creative Commons license. See the album on Flickr.

You can see photos from the Refraction of light activity in Messy Church Does Science below.
All these images are available to download via Flickr under a Creative Commons license. See the album on Flickr.

You can see photos from the Moulded plasticine activity in Messy Church Does Science below.
All these images are available to download via Flickr under a Creative Commons license. See the album on Flickr.

You can see photos from the The blue planet activity in Messy Church Does Science below.
All these images are available to download via Flickr under a Creative Commons license. See the album on Flickr.

You can see photos from the Always moving and all ways moving activity in Messy Church Does Science below.
All these images are available to download via Flickr under a Creative Commons license. See the album on Flickr.

You can see photos from the Invisible air pressure activity in Messy Church Does Science below.
All these images are available to download via Flickr under a Creative Commons license. See the album on Flickr.

You can see photos from the Air resistance and asking questions activity in Messy Church Does Science below.
All these images are available to download via Flickr under a Creative Commons license. See the album on Flickr.

You can see photos from the Air resistance and Cayley cones activity in Messy Church Does Science below.
All these images are available to download via Flickr under a Creative Commons license. See the album on Flickr.

You can see photos from the Wind, seed disperal and autogyros activity in Messy Church Does Science below.
All these images are available to download via Flickr under a Creative Commons license. See the album on Flickr.

You can see photos from the Measuring our breathing activity in Messy Church Does Science below.
All these images are available to download via Flickr under a Creative Commons license. See the album on Flickr.

You can see photos from the Measuring wind direction activity in Messy Church Does Science below.
All these images are available to download via Flickr under a Creative Commons license. See the album on Flickr.

You can see photos from the Light and shadow activity in Messy Church Does Science below.
All these images are available to download via Flickr under a Creative Commons license. See the album on Flickr.

You can see photos from the Red sky at night activity in Messy Church Does Science below.
All these images are available to download via Flickr under a Creative Commons license. See the album on Flickr.

You can see photos from the Acids and alkalis activity in Messy Church Does Science below.
All these images are available to download via Flickr under a Creative Commons license. See the album on Flickr.

You can see photos from the Fluorescence, iridescence and luminescence activity in Messy Church Does Science below.
All these images are available to download via Flickr under a Creative Commons license. See the album on Flickr.

You can see photos from the Young's double slit activity in Messy Church Does Science below.
All these images are available to download via Flickr under a Creative Commons license. See the album on Flickr.

You can see photos from the Heart: pump it up activity in Messy Church Does Science below.
All these images are available to download via Flickr under a Creative Commons license. See the album on Flickr.

You can see photos from the Messy fingerprints activity in Messy Church Does Science below.
All these images are available to download via Flickr under a Creative Commons license. See the album on Flickr.

You can see photos from the Fruit batteries activity in Messy Church Does Science below.
All these images are available to download via Flickr under a Creative Commons license. See the album on Flickr.

You can see photos from the Growing babies best activity in Messy Church Does Science below.
All these images are available to download via Flickr under a Creative Commons license. See the album on Flickr.

You can see photos from the All you need in a seed activity in Messy Church Does Science below.
All these images are available to download via Flickr under a Creative Commons license. See the album on Flickr.

You can see photos from the Survey the churchyard activity in Messy Church Does Science below.
All these images are available to download via Flickr under a Creative Commons license. See the album on Flickr.

You can see photos and download templates from the Feed the birds activity in Messy Church Does Science below.
All these images are available to download via Flickr under a Creative Commons license. See the album on Flickr.
All these templates are free to download and photocopy.

You can see photos and download templates from the Bees activity in Messy Church Does Science below.
All these images are available to download via Flickr under a Creative Commons license. See the album on Flickr.
All these templates are free to download and photocopy.

You can see photos from the Make a milk carton car activity in Messy Church Does Science below.
All these images are available to download via Flickr under a Creative Commons license. See the album on Flickr.

You can see photos from the Speedboat matchsticks activity in Messy Church Does Science below.
All these images are available to download via Flickr under a Creative Commons license. See the album on Flickr.

You can see photos from the Greenhouse effect activity in Messy Church Does Science below.
All these images are available to download via Flickr under a Creative Commons license. See the album on Flickr.

You can see photos from the Cornflour gloop activity in Messy Church Does Science below.
All these images are available to download via Flickr under a Creative Commons license. See the album on Flickr.

You can see photos from the Bicarbonate fizz activity in Messy Church Does Science below.
All these images are available to download via Flickr under a Creative Commons license. See the album on Flickr.

You can see photos from the Cleaning pennies activity in Messy Church Does Science below.
All these images are available to download via Flickr under a Creative Commons license. See the album on Flickr.

You can see photos from the Elephant's toothpaste activity in Messy Church Does Science below.
All these images are available to download via Flickr under a Creative Commons license. See the album on Flickr.

You can see photos from the Types of invisible ink activity in Messy Church Does Science below.
All these images are available to download via Flickr under a Creative Commons license. See the album on Flickr.

You can see photos from the Barton's pendulum activity in Messy Church Does Science below.
All these images are available to download via Flickr under a Creative Commons license. See the album on Flickr.

You can see photos from the Measuring direction: a water compass activity in Messy Church Does Science below.
All these images are available to download via Flickr under a Creative Commons license. See the album on Flickr.

You can see photos from the Measuring temperature: a water thermometer activity in Messy Church Does Science below.
All these images are available to download via Flickr under a Creative Commons license. See the album on Flickr.

You can see photos from the How fast are you? activity in Messy Church Does Science below.
All these images are available to download via Flickr under a Creative Commons license. See the album on Flickr.

An exciting activity from one of our Messy Church which doesn't require glitter, glue or colouring in. Dr Rob Rutherford is from Top of Town Messy Church in Basingstoke, Hampshire and shares this science activity which you should definitely try! Find a saw, wood and bolts and create a thumb piano to create your own Messy tunes on.

The guide is for families and churches to give you some reassurance about how to get started with Christianity in the home.
Getting Started
Take into account the following factors when offering support and resources to families:
Appropriate language and content when selecting Bible stories
There is a range of Bibles available for children and young adults. It is helpful if families can be given guidance as to what is appropriate for different age groups.

This guide is for families and churches on the importance of social action as part of your Messy Church.
Messy social action:
Messy Church seeks to be both ecclesial and missional; in other words, to be both fully a church where the congregation is nurtured and taught in the faith, as well as a church that goes on reaching out creatively with the compassion of God and the good news of Jesus to others in its community and beyond.

The guide is for families and churches to give you some reasurrance before you start to talk about faith in the home.
Reassurance before starting
Whatever a parent’s/carer’s level of knowledge, there are some important points to recognise at the start.

The guide shows you the best way to host a Messy Cathedral, along with lots of other ideas that are worth considering!
How Do We Run a Messy Cathedral Event?
Running a Messy Cathedral event is a brilliant idea! It provides the opportunity to showcase Messy Church in the region, it helps to enlighten people who may be thinking about starting their own Messy Church and it can also encourage those who are already involved in a Messy Church, not forgetting the joy of taking part in a Messy Church together in a high-profile building.

The Messy Church team have put together a 'Maximising the Mess' guide with reasons for you to register your Messy Church on our directory. It's got lots of important points that take into consideration the previous guides, so definitely take a read, because we'd love to have you as part of the ever-growing Messy Church community.

Over the years, Messy Church has grown hugely and we are now celebrating over 3000 churches that are part of the network. With the amount of registrations growing monthly, the amount of families attending this all-age ministry is surely growing too.
The team has decided to put together helpful 'Maximising the Mess' guides to help your families to be excited, ready to come back each month and for you to make the most of your Messy Church.

Faith Pictures is a short course designed to help Christians talk naturally to friends, neighbours and colleagues about what they believe. The heart of the course is about helping people to identify a single picture or image that embodies something of their faith. This is because the kinds of communication which best stick in the mind are concrete and rooted in story.

Many churches take part in a festival, fete or fair at which Messy Church features in some way. Examples might be the Big Church Day Out, the Royal Norfolk Show or one of the Fusion Festivals. Other opportunities to look out for might be events like farmers' markets, car boot sales, craft fairs, patronal festivals or other annual events. Running Messy Church at an open event like one of these is great fun and hugely rewarding but very different from holding it on a regular basis and it's worth bearing the differences in mind.

You may have read in the January - April 2013 edition of Get Messy! about the group of teenagers called ‘Awesome Cake’ from a village in Hampshire. They have kindly sent in the nativity play they wrote together. As their leader Caroline Chichester says, ‘It’s been so important to engage them with the reality of the Gospel today and to see their thinking and faith develop.’

Throughout 2013 the Messy Church Team in the UK has been exploring some of the challenges and advantages of running Messy Churches in schools. Early in the year a questionnaire was sent out to over 50 Messy Churches registered on the website who stated that they met in their local primary or secondary school. In addition, there have been visits to a number of Messy Churches which run in schools in order to talk to leaders, their teams and those who are part of the new congregations.

One Messy Church conducted some research to find out the best time for a new Messy Church to start.
You can see the results of the research (PDF), and you can download the interview sheet for yourself to modify (Word document).

I met Andrew the creator of Cecil the Lost Sheep when I was in Australia last and just love his stuff. Try the free download of the storytelling kit and you’ll see how well it fits into the Messy Church ethos – quirky fun for adults and for children. The books are available in the UK from Wesley Owen, Eden or your local Christian bookshop.

From Richard Shrimpton, Horsley Village Church
Yesterday before telling the story I used a great resource that the children loved: digital Flash Cards on a laptop. There's nothing new about the concept of flash cards but these are available to download as PowerPoint presentations from The Bible Curriculum website. The flash cards tell the whole Bible in 30 images giving a really clear overview of God's big story and helps children understand the chronology of the Bible.

If you use images or photographs either on a website or in publicity material, you generally need to obtain copyright permission first. If you are using images on your website or publicity materials that you have found on Google (or equivalent) by searching, but where you have not looked for copyright information, you are likely in breach of copyright.

You can't run Messy Church on your own - you need a team. You often need a large team by church leadership standards. But don't panic: this simply means you are giving more people a chance to grow in their own discipleship as they serve in Messy Church.

There will be exciting positive months when everything goes well, crowds are pawing at the door asking searching questions about the place of suffering in the world, and when every craft leads young and old into a deep relationship with God and with each other.

By Kathy
We made marshmallow pigs on biscuits (I've previously done marshmallow pigs in 'mud' on top of chocolate angel delight but wasn't sure how many to cater for so decided biscuits was easier). Use one marshmallow for the face, cut 2 triangles of marshmallow for ears and stick them on each side. Use half a mini marshmallow for the snout and writing icing for eyes and 2 dots on the snout. The marshmallows stick reasonably well when cut but a bit of icing for glue always helps!

By Sue Avery
Sue Avery's Messy Church in Cholsey, Oxfordshire, has put together the following craft ideas on the themes of Creation, The Good Samaritan and Palm Sunday. These craft-based ideas work well at Cholsey, where they have a relatively young average age.
The ideas are available as a PDF.
Download

By Pam Mellor
Have you considered using spiritual verse? Some people use the word 'poetry', but that conjures up too many bad experiences of sitting through boring English lessons!
I have attached a copy of a verse which I wrote several months ago, which I have used during worship. Although, not the best piece of literature ever, I was pleasantly surprised by the number of people present, who asked me for a copy!

Joining in! Doing stuff! Being a player, not a spectator! However you want to put it, it's really important to give everyone the chance to participate as much as possible in all parts of Messy Church as participation is a way for people to feel they belong, to learn and to stay engaged.
Participation in the welcome time
Is anyone hanging back, too shy to join in the board games or activities at the start? Have you got enough leaders to keep an eye open for newcomers and to join in alongside them?

by Anne Le Bas
Our local school was looking for resources to go in story bags which would help children to explore Biblical stories. It was easy to find Nativity and Noah's Ark toys and figures, but difficult to find anything else.
A couple of us from our our church therefore devised knitting patterns for Bible character glove puppets, and gave out the patterns to anyone in the church who liked to knit.

by Rev. Canon Duke Vipperman
We wanted to put something in the kids empty hands. So we developed the idea of a 'Blessing Box'. We used white Bride's favour boxes often placed at the table setting of guests at a Wedding reception. They are easy enough for most kids to assemble themselves.
Then the box was filled with symbols of each beatitude. Riffing off the reworded Beatitudes found elsewhere on this Messy Church site, we gave the kids these ideas:
1. Good on you who feel empty,God's home is open to you.

by Rachel Parkinson
Years ago I had seen a large banner made by blanking off parts of the cloth to leave a cross shape revealed. People then walked all over it having dipped the soles of their feet in paint. The result - a footprint cross - was really effective. I wanted to do the same for our second Messy Church.

by Anne
An unexpected hit at our Advent/Christmas Messy Church session yesterday were decorated Advent Candles. It was really just an extra 'filler' activity in case we needed it, but it really seemed to absorb a wide range of people - one Dad really got into it and produced a wonderful candle.

by Valerie Prettyman
You'll need:
2 level spoonfuls icing sugar
1 spoon white wine vinegar
selection of food colourings
card squares
cocktail sticks
a paste brush
Mix together the icing sugar and the vinegar. Then brush it completely over your card. Be generous in your application! Then dip the cocktail stick in the first colour of food colouring and hold it onto the card where it will start to spread in a snowflake pattern. Then introduce more colours. DO NOT USE TOO MUCH as it does spread!

Many Messy Churches enjoy the company of people with disabilities.
With this in mind, we asked Cristina Gangemi to describe how to make a Messy Church experience most helpful for families in which someone has a disability. Cristina produced the following piece of work full of interest, challenge and practical ideas. Some of these we can put into practice tomorrow; some of them require careful planning and some may be a step too far for teams who are already stretched. But we can all have our eyes opened to new ways of making sure that all people are welcome in our Messy Churches.

We've put together a helpful introduction to Messy Church for church leaders. Hopefully this will be a useful tool to use to talk to your church leaders about Messy Church.
The PDF includes endorsements, benefits for your church and some of the why and how.